New England (Australia)

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The New England region of Australia, here showing Mt Duval
The New England region of Australia, here showing Mt Duval
Approximate location of New England within New South Wales; red a narrow definition, yellow a broader definition
Approximate location of New England within New South Wales; red a narrow definition, yellow a broader definition

New England is the name given to a region in the north of the state of New South Wales, Australia.

The two traditional centres of New England are Armidale and Tamworth. Armidale is the home of the University of New England, Australia's oldest regional university. Tamworth is now best known as the centre of Australia's country music industry. Today, however, the fast-growing coastal centres of Ballina, Coffs Harbour, and Port Macquarie are outstripping these inland centres.

The inland region contains some of Australia's richest wool-growing areas. The coastal regions support semi-tropical agriculture such as sugarcane growing, and are also major tourist areas, particularly the far north coast towns such as Byron Bay and Murwillumbah.

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[edit] Geography

New England has no defined boundaries, and the term has several possible definitions.

Rocky ridges like this are scattered across the New England landscape
Rocky ridges like this are scattered across the New England landscape

At its narrowest, New England may be defined as the area of the Great Dividing Ranges running south from the Queensland border to about Quirindi, and including neither the coastal regions of northern New South Wales nor the Western Slopes region west of the line Inverell-Gunnedah. A broader definition would include the region bounded on the north by the Queensland border, on the east by the Pacific Ocean, on the south by the Liverpool Range, and on the west by the line Boggabilla-Moree-Narrabri-Coonabarabran. To the north in Queensland is the Granite Belt and the Darling Downs.

The New England region is traversed by the New England Highway, which links Tamworth, Armidale, Glen Innes, and Tenterfield, and is a major route linking New South Wales and Queensland. The New England railway line following the same route was the first railway link between the states, however the coastal railway is now used and the New England line is disused north of Armidale. The Oxley Highway, Gwydir Highway, and Bruxner Highway traverse the New England Region from west to east.

Abandoned railway north of Armidale
Abandoned railway north of Armidale

The topography of the region is dominated by the Northern Tablelands plateau. The Macleay River and the Severn River are the two of the regions major rivers.

[edit] Pre-History

The region has been occupied by Indigenous Australians for thousands of years, notably in the west were the Kamilaroi people. In the highlands, the original languages, which are now extinct, were Anaiwan (or Nganaywana) to the south of Guyra and Ngarrabal and Marabal to the north of Guyra.

[edit] History

The first European person to explore the New England area was English explorer John Oxley, who crossed the southern part of the New England Range and discovered and named Port Macquarie in 1818. In 1827 Allan Cunningham traveled north along the western edge of the Range until he reached the Darling Downs in Queensland. The area was opened up for settlement in the 1830s, although the semi-tropical coastal areas remained undeveloped for many years.

[edit] New State Movement

New England has been the home of Australia's most persistent attempt to form a new state within the Australian commonwealth. Many New England people long resented being governed from Sydney, especially when, as is usually the case, there is a Labor government in New South Wales, dominated by urban interests. In the 1930s and again in the 1960s, the New England New State Movement campaigned for New England to be separated from New South Wales. The movement was closely allied with the Country Party, which could have expected to form the government of such a new state.

Chapter VI of the Australian Constitution allows new states to be formed, but only with the consent of the Parliament of the state in question. It has never been likely that the New South Wales Parliament would consent to the separation of New England.

View over the town of Armidale
View over the town of Armidale

[edit] Towns in New England

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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